Vn80.1 Planning for School 9/2/77

Miriam, showing her unprompted concern, began the following
dialogue. I transcribed it from memory (not tape) about 2 hours after the
fact. The content is accurate, though the sequence of points may be a
bit muddled.

Miriam

What do you think the teacher will say when she finds out I can add?
Bob

What do you think?
Miriam

I think she’ll be mad at me.
Bob

Are you worried about that?
Miriam

Yeah.
Bob

Don’t worry, sweety. I’m going to have a meeting with your teacher next week. She knows you’ve been working with me at Logo and wants to know what she should try to teach you.
Miriam

What do you think?
Bob

I don’t know. What do you want me to tell her?
Miriam

I guess I should just do the regular stuff.
Bob

You mean like 2 plus 3 is 5?
Miriam

Yeah.
Bob

For a whole year? When you already learned to add big numbers at Logo?
Miriam

I didn’t learn that at Logo. You taught me.
Bob

Oh. I don’t mean the really big ones. I mean numbers, say, that you use in
playing SHOOT. Like 90 plus 90 is a hundred 80.
Miriam

I didn’t learn that [I didn’t figure it out]. You told me.
Bob

But I don’t have to tell you any more, do I?
Miriam

No. . . . When do they usually do numbers like that in school?
Bob

At the end of second grade, maybe third grade.
Miriam

You mean I can skip a grade?
Bob

You can read well and do computations. I guess you could skip a grade if you wanted.
Do you want to?
Miriam

Do I have to?
Bob

No. You said before you wanted to stay with your friends. I think that’s a good idea
and you shouldn’t skip a grade. But how will you feel about school?
Miriam

Art should be a lot of fun. And so should gym.
Bob

I bet they’ll let you read whatever books you want. That should be good.
Miriam

Yeah.
Bob

About the arithmetic: maybe I should worry about that, make the work for you to do.
Maybe I could get some good advice from Dan Watt. How would that be?
Miriam

Well, I don’t know. Maybe it would be O.K.

At this point, Miriam terminated our conversation, drifting out into the
court yard to watch people moving furniture.

Relevance
In this dialogue, Miriam and I discuss what she should do when she
starts school. She expresses fear that her teacher will be mad at her
because she already knows how to add. I inform her of an impending
conference with her teacher and ask her advice.

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